New York Post

Flaws show NYC system is 2nd rate

- HOWARD HUSOCK Howard Husock is an adjunct scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a contributi­ng editor of City Journal.

THE rank incompeten­ce of the city’s Board of Elections in counting test ballots — that no voter ever marked — in its first-ever ranked-choice vote count should be the occasion for New York to reflect on whether we really should be using this system at all.

Ranked choice — now in use in 22 US jurisdicti­ons — has some attractive qualities. As Fair Vote — the national organizati­on that is the system’s leading advocate — notes, it can, at least in theory, make “democracy more fair” by helping to choose a winner with the widest possible base of support.

But as the test ballot “results” made clear, this is a system that, as it stands, can introduce serious distortion­s. Kathryn Garcia’s open strategy to gain second-place votes — which would become first-place votes once Andrew Yang or others were eliminated — raises the possibilit­y that the ultimate winner could have more runner-up than first-place votes. Do we really want a mayor whom the largest number of voters think is second best?

It’s even more important to note that New York’s rankedchoi­ce system is starkly different than those of San Francisco or Oakland. Gotham is the only RCV city that retains a closed party primary. In a city where there are more than 1 million registered independen­ts and Republican­s, those voters get no real voice at all. Well worth considerin­g would be a process open to all, of the kinds that Blue Boston and Chicago use: a wide-open preliminar­y election followed by a runoff between the top two finishers.

Such a truly more inclusive system would help guard against extremists like Maya Wiley gaming the rankedchoi­ce system and moving into Gracie Mansion.

Don’t think that can’t happen. One of the reasons Minneapoli­s government has gone off the rails stems from that city’s RCV system. The sober and centrist longtime president of its City Council — who ran on a public-safety-focused platform — finished first in a first vote round but lost later to a candidate who openly called for “defunding” the police.

Ranked-choice voting is seductive in its promise of civil discourse and voter consensus. But it offers no guarantee of either.

Indeed, it may have opened the door on a round of practical problems and political recriminat­ions.

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